Behavioral thermoregulation in primates: A review of literature and future avenues

被引:1
|
作者
Thompson, Cynthia L. [1 ]
Hermann, Emily A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Grand Valley State Univ, Dept Biomed Sci, 220 Padnos Hall,One Campus Dr, Allendale, MI 49401 USA
关键词
activity budgeting; behavioral plasticity; body position; climate change; cold avoidance; evaporative cooling; heat stress; microhabitat; temperature; thermal pressures; WHITE-FACED CAPUCHINS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; ACTIVITY PATTERNS; MODEL SELECTION; GLOBAL RISK; HEAT; RESPONSES; TEMPERATURE; WATER; COLD;
D O I
10.1002/ajp.23614
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
Primates face severe challenges from climate change, with warming expected to increase animals' thermoregulatory demands. Primates have limited long-term options to cope with climate change, but possess a remarkable capacity for behavioral plasticity. This creates an urgency to better understand the behavioral mechanisms primates use to thermoregulate. While considerable information exists on primate behavioral thermoregulation, it is often scattered in the literature in a manner that is difficult to integrate. This review evaluates the status of the available literature on primate behavioral thermoregulation to facilitate future research. We surveyed peer-reviewed publications on primate thermoregulation for N = 17 behaviors across four thermoregulatory categories: activity budgeting, microhabitat use, body positioning, and evaporative cooling. We recorded data on the primate taxa evaluated, support for a thermoregulatory function, thermal variable assessed, and naturalistic/manipulative study conditions. Behavioral thermoregulation was pervasive across primates, with N = 721 cases of thermoregulatory behaviors identified across N = 284 published studies. Most genera were known to utilize multiple behaviors ( x over bar = 4.5 +/- 3.1 behaviors/genera). Activity budgeting behaviors were the most commonly encountered category in the literature (54.5% of cases), while evaporative cooling behaviors were the least represented (6.9% of cases). Behavioral thermoregulation studies were underrepresented for certain taxonomic groups, including lemurs, lorises, galagos, and Central/South American primates, and there were large within-taxa disparities in representation of genera. Support for a thermoregulatory function was consistently high across all behaviors, spanning both hot- and cold-avoidance strategies. This review reveals asymmetries in the current literature and avenues for future research. Increased knowledge of the impact thermoregulatory behaviors have on biologically relevant outcomes is needed to better assess primate responses to warming environments and develop early indicators of thermal stress. Behavioral thermoregulation is widespread in primates. image Primates are expected to fare poorly as the climate changes, but behavioral plasticity may provide a mechanism to cope with warming environments. Behavioral thermoregulation is widespread across primate taxa, and animals use many different behaviors to thermoregulate. Strepsirrhines, tarsiers, and Central and South American monkeys are underrepresented in the literature, as are evaporative cooling behaviors. Research is needed to address these deficiencies and prioritize development of behavioral indicators of heat stress.
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页数:21
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